People can seem perfectly fine, until they seem to spontaneously turn into hoarders, or start eating all your food and lying about it, or start being aggressively in your face about a bunch of antagonistic culture bullshit, etc.
I think what we’re seeing is Americans increasingly fed up with (or even terrified of) other Americans.
It’s possible there are more unhinged people today, but I think that’s also a consequence of us spending so much time alone in the first place (and sycophantic bots are only going to make that worse).
I was also thinking of everyone, not just US Americans.
There is a reason for this, and it isn't because they hate their mental health.
The issue here is how hard it is to protect your own mental health when someone else refuses to respect yours, and how a co-living situation can make that hard - because you literally are all up in each others business.
I realize hearing that or seeing that others may read that may anger people who are deeply invested in this fraud that diversity is good, but all the legitimate research into the topic all tells us the same thing; that it is detrimental to any and all human communities all around the world, even for the very group that pushes it on others while aggressively rejecting it for themselves and their own.
I realize hearing that or seeing that others may read that, may anger people who are deeply invested in the fraud that diversity is good, but all the legitimate research into the topic all tells us the same thing; that “diversity” is detrimental to any and all human communities all around the world, even for the very group that pushes it on others while aggressively rejecting it for themselves and their own.
Living in suburbia has definitely made me yearn for this: https://www.architecturaldigest.com/story/should-more-of-us-...
But it's getting harder because of the housing market.
Neither are threatened by living with a friend or someone else near your age. Sure, move out of your parents’ home, but that doesn’t mean you have to live alone.
The difference between sharing a 2BR and living in an apartment building are more exercises in cultural than physical difference.
One is a friend. The other an acquaintance.
This reminds me, yesterday I was walking down the hallway of my apartment building, and one of my neighbors passed by me but neglected to even acknowledge my existence, because their head was down staring at their smartphone.
Sharing a house is a good way to combat that. Sometimes you move in with people you tangentially know. Sometimes you won’t be huge friends with them but can still interact, or may even meet some of their friends and hit it off.
29% seems like a fairly neutral number.
Only a king or simpleton believes this.
How do you know it's by choice?
How much of a choice is it that they made willing? The number has doubled over the last few decades:
* https://www.self.inc/blog/adults-living-alone
* https://thesocietypages.org/graphicsociology/tag/living-alon...
There are health (and happiness) consequences to not being connected to other people:
* https://archive.is/https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive...
I'm not seeing evidence that 15% is the correct number and 29% is automatically bad.
Considering there are both housing and loneliness crises going on, and that being lonely or socially isolated leads to an early death and radicalisation, I’d say it’s fair to categorise it as a bad thing, yes.
Sure, not every single one of those people living alone will be lonely, but I think it’s fair to deduce that many people who are lonely and isolated live alone.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/06/19/health/loneliness-social-isol...
https://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/lcdocs/other/21402/Delany%...
It's not (just) about the absolute number, but the trend as well; see "Chart 2. Rise of single-person households, 1990–2025".
Something I’ve noticed recently is many college graduates living alone. That’s fine. But it’s a weird default for early in one’s career. If I had one general piece of advice for anyone starting their career, it would be to seek out a living situation with roommates.
Side question: are more college students staying in solo dorms?
But that’s also the point. Low risk situation to practice things that later in life become much higher risk. Better to figure out how to cohabitate with a few random roommates than a SO down the road.
b3ing•1h ago
lm28469•1h ago
individualistic
nemomarx•1h ago
tyleo•1h ago
Even so, splitting rent, utilities, and furniture was a significant financial advantage and helped set us up for long-term success.
We had our disagreements, and eventually a falling out with one roommate, but I’d do it all again. The other roommate and I are life long friends and you learn lessons and form bonds in addition to the financial benefit.
booleandilemma•1h ago
g-b-r•1h ago
booleandilemma•1h ago
rexpop•1h ago
lm28469•1h ago
And men too... lots of them stay adolescent well into their 30s and require a caregiver or a substitute mom more than a gf/wife. Men exclusively blaming women for their problems tend to be basement dwellers or other kind of failures who don't want to take any responsibility
bragh•46m ago
What do you actually mean by this part?
Cthulhu_•51m ago
g-b-r•1h ago
Cthulhu_•51m ago
jltsiren•34m ago